Blog post #1

The reading I did by Walt Whitman, I Sing the Body Electric, is a rather long poem describing the human anatomy from different perspectives, all being generally positive as well as empowering to ones self. A good example of this can be found all though out the poem, however one stood out to me was toward the center/ end parts when Whitman begins a story about a slave auction taking place and how the slaves, who at this point were obviously treated as objects rather than people, have their own souls, wills, dreams and ambitions besides being sold off into whatever hell they are to be subjected to (My words). This really opened up a different path for the poem as a whole for me as it came to light that it was not just a poem about self empowerment and divine enjoyment, it was telling a deeper story, no matter who you are, what you hail from, or what gender you were given by the grace of god, you are a living breathing, thinking person and that should never be given up, even in times of desperation. In regards to how this can correlate with Cullers question What is Literature, Culler almost directly talks about literature as the inclusion of different writing techniques to convey or project emotion from the reader, which can be seen in multiple stages of the piece by Whitman, from how he describes a normal every day person as something divine and even when trying to pull apart the comparison between slaves and objects by stating that slaves have their own free will, even if under law that is not the case. Even when describing the men who are auctioning and being auctioned, he never lets the tone of “creator”, so to speak, dissipate, meaning that he has a sort of tone that makes him see the beauty in even the most fragile and damaged.

1 thought on “Blog post #1

  1. Jorge, this is insightful, but you stray a good deal from the text of the poem. Are there ways you can relate these thoughts to specific lines in the poem?

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